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Dive into the research topics where Kirsty Buising is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirsty Buising.


Thorax | 2006

A prospective comparison of severity scores for identifying patients with severe community acquired pneumonia: reconsidering what is meant by severe pneumonia

Kirsty Buising; Karin Thursky; Jim Black; Lachlan MacGregor; Alan Street; Marcus Kennedy; Graham V. Brown

Background: Several severity scores have been proposed to predict patient outcome and to guide initial management of patients with community acquired pneumonia (CAP). Most have been derived as predictors of mortality. A study was undertaken to compare the predictive value of these tools using different clinically meaningful outcomes as constructs for “severe pneumonia”. Methods: A prospective cohort study was performed of all patients presenting to the emergency department with an admission diagnosis of CAP from March 2003 to March 2004. Clinical and laboratory features at presentation were used to calculate severity scores using the pneumonia severity index (PSI), the revised American Thoracic Society score (rATS), and the British Thoracic Society (BTS) severity scores CURB, modified BTS severity score, and CURB-65. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values were compared for four different outcomes (death, need for ICU admission, and combined outcomes of death and/or need for ventilatory or inotropic support). Results: 392 patients were included in the analysis; 37 (9.4%) died and 26 (6.6%) required ventilatory and/or inotropic support. The modified BTS severity score performed best for all four outcomes. The PSI (classes IV+V) and CURB had a very similar performance as predictive tools for each outcome. The rATS identified the need for ICU admission well but not mortality. The CURB-65 score predicted mortality well but performed less well when requirement for ICU was included in the outcome of interest. When the combined outcome was evaluated (excluding patients aged >90 years and those from nursing homes), the best predictors were the modified BTS severity score (sensitivity 94.3%) and the PSI and CURB score (sensitivity 83.3% for both). Conclusions: Different severity scores have different strengths and weaknesses as prediction tools. Validation should be done in the most relevant clinical setting, using more appropriate constructs of “severe pneumonia” to ensure that these potentially useful tools truly deliver what clinicians expect of them.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2012

Microbiological Aetiology, Epidemiology, and Clinical Profile of Prosthetic Joint Infections: Are Current Antibiotic Prophylaxis Guidelines Effective?

Trisha N. Peel; Allen C. Cheng; Kirsty Buising; Peter F. M. Choong

ABSTRACT Prosthetic joint infections remain a major complication of arthroplasty. At present, local and international guidelines recommend cefazolin as a surgical antibiotic prophylaxis at the time of arthroplasty. This retrospective cohort study conducted across 10 hospitals over a 3-year period (January 2006 to December 2008) investigated the epidemiology and microbiological etiology of prosthetic joint infections. There were 163 cases of prosthetic joint infection identified. From a review of the microbiological culture results, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and coagulase-negative staphylococci were isolated in 45% of infections. In addition, polymicrobial infections, particularly those involving Gram-negative bacilli and enterococcal species, were common (36%). The majority (88%) of patients received cefazolin as an antibiotic prophylaxis at the time of arthroplasty. In 63% of patients in this cohort, the microorganisms subsequently obtained were not susceptible to the antibiotic prophylaxis administered. The results of this study highlight the importance of ongoing reviews of the local ecology of prosthetic joint infection, demonstrating that the spectrum of pathogens involved is broad. The results should inform empirical antibiotic therapy. This report also provokes discussion about infection control strategies, including changing surgical antibiotic prophylaxis to a combination of glycopeptide and cefazolin, to reduce the incidence of infections due to methicillin-resistant staphylococci.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2010

Oseltamivir resistance in adult oncology and hematology patients infected with pandemic (H1N1) 2009 virus, Australia.

Adrian R Tramontana; B George; Aeron C. Hurt; Joseph S. Doyle; Katherine M Langan; Alistair B. Reid; Janet M. Harper; Karin Thursky; Leon J. Worth; Dominic E. Dwyer; C. Orla Morrissey; Paul D. R. Johnson; Kirsty Buising; Simon J. Harrison; John F. Seymour; Patricia E. Ferguson; Bin Wang; Justin T. Denholm; Allen C. Cheng; Monica A. Slavin

Resistance in virus-infected stem cell transplant recipients illustrates the need for surveillance.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2008

Electronic antibiotic stewardship—reduced consumption of broad-spectrum antibiotics using a computerized antimicrobial approval system in a hospital setting

Kirsty Buising; Karin Thursky; M. B. Robertson; Jim Black; Alan Street; Michael J. Richards; Graham V. Brown

OBJECTIVESnAntibiotic stewardship is important, but the ideal strategy for providing stewardship in a hospital setting is unknown. A practical, sustainable and transferable strategy is needed. This study evaluates the impact of a novel computerized antimicrobial approval system on antibiotic-prescribing behaviour in a hospital. Effects on drug consumption, antibiotic resistance patterns of local bacteria and patient outcomes were monitored.nnnMETHODSnThe study was conducted at a tertiary referral teaching hospital in Melbourne, Australia. The system was deployed in January 2005 and guided the use of 28 restricted antimicrobials. Data were collected over 7 years: 5 years before and 2 years after deployment. Uptake of the system was evaluated using an in-built audit trail. Drug utilization was prospectively monitored using pharmacy data (as defined daily doses per 1000 bed-days) and analysed via time-series analysis with segmental linear regression. Antibiograms of local bacteria were prospectively evaluated. In-hospital mortality and length of stay for patients with Gram-negative bacteraemia were also reported.nnnRESULTSnBetween 250 and 300 approvals were registered per month during 2006. The gradients in the use of third- and fourth-generation cephalosporins (+0.52, -0.05, -0.39; P < 0.01), glycopeptides (+0.27, -0.53; P = 0.09), carbapenems (+0.12, -0.24; P = 0.21), aminoglycosides (+0.15, -0.27; P < 0.01) and quinolones (+0.76, +0.11; P = 0.08) all fell after deployment, while extended-spectrum penicillin use increased. Trends in increased susceptibility of Staphylococcus aureus to methicillin and improved susceptibility of Pseudomonas spp. to many antibiotics were observed. No increase in adverse outcomes for patients with Gram-negative bacteraemia was observed.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe system was successfully adopted and significant changes in antimicrobial usage were demonstrated.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2010

Improved susceptibility of Gram-negative bacteria in an intensive care unit following implementation of a computerized antibiotic decision support system

M. K. Yong; Kirsty Buising; Allen C. Cheng; Karin Thursky

OBJECTIVESnEmergence of multiresistant Gram-negative organisms in intensive care units (ICUs) throughout the world is a concerning problem. Therefore we undertook a study to follow the resistance patterns of the most common clinically isolated Gram-negative organisms within our ICU following an antibiotic stewardship intervention to evaluate whether a reduction in broad-spectrum antibiotics improves local antibiotic resistance patterns.nnnMETHODSnThis prospective study was conducted over a 7 year period within an ICU at a tertiary teaching hospital in Melbourne, Australia. All clinically isolated Gram-negative organisms were identified and extracted from the hospital pathology system. Three monthly antibiograms were created. The pre-interventional period occurred between January 2000 and June 2002 (10 quarters) and the post-interventional period was defined from July 2002 to December 2006 (18 quarters). Segmented linear regression was used to analyse for a difference in the rates of change in susceptibility.nnnRESULTSnA total of 2838 Gram-negative organisms were isolated from clinical sites from ICU patients during the study period. There was significant improvement in susceptibility of Pseudomonas to imipenem 18.3%/year [95% confidence interval (CI): 4.9-31.6; P = 0.009] and gentamicin 11.6%/year (95% CI: 1.8-21.5; P = 0.02) compared with the pre-intervention trend. Significant changes in the rates of gentamicin and ciprofloxacin susceptibility were also observed in the inducible Enterobacteriaceae group although these were less clinically significant.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThis study demonstrates improved antibiotic susceptibility of ICU Gram-negative isolates including Pseudomonas following an intervention aimed at reducing broad-spectrum antibiotics.


Journal of Hospital Infection | 2011

Risk factors for prosthetic hip and knee infections according to arthroplasty site.

Trisha N. Peel; Michelle M. Dowsey; John Daffy; Peter Stanley; Peter F. M. Choong; Kirsty Buising

Prosthetic joint infection is a devastating complication of arthroplasty. Previous epidemiological studies have assessed factors associated with arthroplasty infections but have not assessed the impact of comorbidity on infection at different arthroplasty locations. We used a case-control design to investigate risk factors for prosthetic joint infection with reference to the anatomical site. During an eight-year period at a single hospital, 63 patients developed a prosthetic joint infection (36 hips, 27 knees). Cases of prosthetic hip or knee joint infection were matched 1:2 to controls. The results suggest that factors associated with arthroplasty infections differ with anatomical location. Following knee arthroplasty, wound discharge was associated with an increased risk of prosthetic joint infection whereas the presence of a drain tube reduced the risk. By contrast, increased body mass index, increased drain tube loss and superficial incisional surgical site infections (SSIs) were associated with prosthetic hip infection. When analysed as a combined cohort, systemic steroid use, increased SSI drain tube losses, wound discharge, and superficial incisional SSIs were predictors of infection.


Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2011

Epidemiology of Infections Acquired in Intensive Care Units

Joseph S. Doyle; Kirsty Buising; Karin Thursky; Leon J. Worth; Michael J. Richards

Infections acquired in the intensive care unit (ICU) are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Using surveillance data collected in the United States and internationally, we describe contemporary rates, sites, and pathogens responsible for common ICU-acquired infections. Emerging pathogens are outlined, including a systematic review of published ICU infection outbreaks from 2005 to 2010. Compared with a similar review of outbreaks conducted in 2003, multiresistant gram-negative bacteria (eg, ACINETOBACTER and PSEUDOMONAS species) were more commonly reported, whereas resistant STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS was reported less frequently. Advances in ICU infection prevention, including central line bundles, chlorhexidine body wash, and hand hygiene interventions occurred during this period. We also describe how changes in the pattern of antimicrobial use can affect the prevalence of multiresistant pathogens.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2011

Gram-negative prosthetic joint infection treated with debridement, prosthesis retention and antibiotic regimens including a fluoroquinolone

Craig Aboltins; Michelle M. Dowsey; Kirsty Buising; Trisha N. Peel; John Daffy; Peter F. M. Choong; Peter Stanley

Information is required about treatment outcomes of Gram-negative prosthetic joint infections treated with prosthesis retention and surgical debridement, especially where biofilm-active antibiotics such as fluoroquinolones are used. The outcome of 17 consecutive patients with an early Gram-negative prosthetic joint infection who had been treated with prosthesis retention and surgical debridement was analysed. Enterobacteriaceae were isolated in 16 patients and infections were mixed with other organisms in 13 (76%) patients. The median joint age was 17 days and the median duration of symptoms before debridement was 7 days. All patients initially received intravenous β-lactam antibiotic therapy and 14 patients were then treated with oral ciprofloxacin. Treatment failure occurred in two patients over a median period of follow-up of 28 months. In only one patient was a relapsed Gram-negative infection responsible for the failure and this patient had not been treated with ciprofloxacin. The 2-year survival rate free of treatment failure was 94% (95% CI, 63-99%). Prosthesis retention with surgical debridement, in combination with antibiotic regimens including ciprofloxacin, was effective and should be considered for patients with early Gram-negative prosthetic joint infection.


Emergency Medicine Australasia | 2007

Identifying severe community‐acquired pneumonia in the emergency department: A simple clinical prediction tool

Kirsty Buising; Karin Thursky; Jim Black; Lachlan MacGregor; Alan Street; Marcus Kennedy; Graham V. Brown

Objective:u2003 To identify independent predictors of severe pneumonia in a local population, and create a simple severity score that would be useful in the ED.


Anz Journal of Surgery | 2011

Prosthetic joint infection: challenges of diagnosis and treatment

Trisha N. Peel; Kirsty Buising; Peter F. M. Choong

Arthroplasty for arthritis has led to remarkable improvement in patient quality of life and alleviation of symptoms. A major complication of this surgery is infection. This review examines current understanding of epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of prosthetic joint infections. In particular, this article focuses on the role of biofilm formation in the pathogenesis of device infections and the diagnostic and treatment challenges associated with this process.

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Karin Thursky

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre

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Peter F. M. Choong

St. Vincent's Health System

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Jim Black

University of Melbourne

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Peter Stanley

St. Vincent's Health System

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